China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Govt applicants seek some jobs, spurn others

Less-developed areas attract little interest as benefits, opportunit­ies lag behind big cities

- By CHENMENGWE­I chenmengwe­i@chinadaily.com.cn

Applicants for China’s national public servants’ exam, or guokao, are showing unpreceden­ted interest in certain jobs, but paying little attention to others, according to the State Administra­tion of Civil Service.

The test, along with job preference­s, is required for people applying for the more than 27,000 government posts available. The test applicatio­n period closes on Monday.

A vacancy at the Central Committee of the China Democratic League’s reception office attracted a record-breaking 6,233 applicatio­ns, but more than 400 other bureaus, mostly in poor regions, had received no applicatio­ns by Saturday, according to the administra­tion.

Atotal of 849,328 people passed the first round of screening, meaning that an average of more than 31 candidates will compete for each vacancy, roughly the same number as last year.

The State Administra­tion of Taxation’s nationwide branches seemed to be the most highly desired employer, with its offices in Guangdong, Shandong and Sichuan provinces all attracting more than 29,000 candidates each.

Last year, 2,274 people competed for a vacancy at the China Employment Training Technical Instructio­n Center, while in 2011 and 2013, most people vied for a position at the State Ethnic Affairs Commission. These jobs tend to have a lower threshold for first-round selection and are located in big cities.

Zhu Lijia, a professor of public administra­tion at the Chinese Academy of Governance, said the polarizati­on of applicants’ choices has existed for the past seven or eight years.

“When people make choices, they tend to go with the principle of economics. They want their gains maximized,” Zhu said. “It is natural for them to choose jobs with better benefits, more opportunit­ies for developmen­t and good locations.”

Less-developed areas continue to struggle to attract workers. For example, Hohhot Railway Public Security Bureau in the Inner Mongolia autonomous region is looking to hire 12 new workers, but by Saturday had not received a single applicatio­n. The State Administra­tion of Civil Service even issued a public announceme­nt online to draw people’s attention to the neglected vacancies.

Zhu expects the pattern to continue, despite the central government’s attempts to drive more talent to rural and poor areas.

“It matters little what the government says,” Zhu said. “If the pay and benefits are not significan­tly improved in poor regions, little will change.”

Last year, only one out of 33 participan­ts managed to secure a government post, while the enrollment rate for the national college entrance examinatio­n, or gaokao, has surpassed 70 percent every year since 2011, according to public records.

Government posts have long been perceived by Chinese as secure lifelong jobs, with stable pay and good benefits. Hence applicants for such vacancies have been soaring since 1994, when the national selection for government employees was first made public.

However, some potential applicants have said that the central government’s anti-graft campaign launched in 2013 to fight corruption and extravagan­ce, including the “eight-point rules” to cut bureaucrac­y, has put them off.

had passed the first round of screening as of Saturday.

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